This week, Microsoft confirmed that Windows 10 is now installed on over 200 million devices across the globe, making it one of the fastest growing operating systems ever released by the company.

More than 40% of those devices became active since Black Friday on November 29th, raising US retail PC share for Windows 10 by 16 points to 62%, and the number of sales of Windows 10 machines over the holiday season has also been impressive, with some 87% of PCs sold coming installed with Windows 10, versus only 58% before the holidays.

In light of Microsoft announcing 200 million Windows 10 installs, Steam updated their stats to reveal Windows 10 was now in use on over 33% of Steam users PC’s, a pretty impressive number considering Windows 10 is less than a year old.

Last month, just under 30% (specifically, 29%) of Steam users were running Windows 10. In December 2015, that number jumped roughly three percentage points to 32.46%. Windows 7’s lead is narrowing, down to 42.58% although still firmly in the #1 spot.

Also this week, Gabe Aul mentioned that his team was working hard on getting the next Redstone build out pretty quickly, and that once the next preview build was release, the company would begin speeding up build drops.

In the past, Microsoft referencing any time frame for Insider drops would mean anything from a few weeks to a couple months, but the insinuation here as that Insiders should expect it soon, probably within the next week or so at the latest.

This week also saw Microsoft detail advances that had been made with display scaling in Windows 10, including features such as using different DPIs across different screens at one time. Microsoft says:

Scaling is a complex problem for the open Windows ecosystem, which has to support devices ranging in size from roughly 4” to 84,” with densities ranging from 50DPI to 500DPI. In Windows 10 we took steps to consolidate and simplify our developer story for scaling and to improve the end-user visual experience. Stay tuned for future release!”